Our slow-release granular fertilizer (5-6-5) gives your tomatoes all the nutrients they need, including plenty of phosphorus for big, abundant fruit. For a healthy start, mix a handful into the soil at transplant time and then side dress when tomatoes begin to set fruit. Also ideal for peppers and eggplant. Contains peanut meal.

This is the best tomato fertilizer I've ever used. Fantastic yield this year! A caveat: make sure you sprinkle garlic granules or some other item that repels critters like raccoons, after you've worked this fertilizer into your tomatoes' soil. The fishy components attact anything that likes fish! A racoon dug up everything around a tomato plant fertilized with this one, but once I spread the malodorous repellent garlic granules around the repaired site, the critters left it alone!

I have been struggling with tomatoe blight all season. So I thought I would give the plants extra nutrients to help them fight the fungus. Both plants with and without fungus are producing more tomatoes. And I think it helped those plants with the fungus get stronger. Can't be sure what caused what, because of other Gardeners products used,but my tomatoe plants are still alive and producing.

I used when I transplant tomato plants to my container garden. It grew beautifully and after that I used every 4 weeks. Now I have huge heirloom tomatoes all over my garden. This is the second year and I will use next year too.

I sent for this because my tomatoes needed a pick-me-up. I've used it before and was very satisfied with the results. The tomatoes looked greener and grew well as a direct result of the fertilizer. It worked this time just as well. My plants look so much healthier.

After feeding the tomatoes, I used this on my eggplants as well as they're kind of related to tomatoes. The eggplant plants responded beautifully. They didn't know that this was designed for tomatoes.

The fertilizer must have something in it that critters like. I left the bag in my garden and it was torn open the next morning. Now I keep it in a plastic container.

Articles

A water-soaked spot at the blossom end of tomato fruits is the classic symptom of blossom-end rot. This relatively common garden problem is not a disease, but rather a physiological disorder caused by a calcium imbalance within the plant. It can occur in pepper, squash, cucumber, and melon fruits as well as tomatoes.

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